A new poll has confirmed what we all already know: America is feeling the pressure.

Gallup released its annual Global Emotions Report this week. The survey of 151,000 adults in more than 140 countries found that levels of stress, anger and worry spiked in the US during 2018.

Researchers ranked America as the seventh most-stressed country in the world — falling not far behind developing nations such as Tanzania and the Philippines, economically embattled Greece and war-torn Iran.

With data from more than 1,000 Americans, pollers asked participants questions related to their emotions, such as “Did you smile or laugh a lot yesterday?” and “Were you treated with respect all day yesterday?”

About 55% of adults in the US said they’d felt stressed during “a lot of the day,” outranking the global average by 20%. Also, 45% said they’d felt worry, and another 22% had been angered recently.

The US didn’t make the top worried ranks, but scored high marks nonetheless with 45 percent, compared to the global average of 39 percent. We also weren’t the angriest nation, but rated on par with the worldwide average of 22 percent. For us, that’s still an increase from 2017.

Around two out of three Americans under 50 said they’d been stressed lately. About half of all people aged 15 to 49 felt worry, and at least a quarter or more were feeling more anger. Those 50 and older clocked 11 percentage points behind the national stress average.

In general, Gallup found that Americans who are under 50, earning in the bottom 20% or dissatisfied with President Trump correlated most strongly with these negative emotions.

Gallup’s managing editor Julie Ray tells The Times that they can’t say for sure whether the overall spike in bad feelings can be attributed to the political climate, saying “We are seeing patterns that would point to a political explanation, or a polarization explanation, with the US data, but can we say that definitively? No.”

Those looking for a more optimistic environment might want to look south: As in years prior, many Latin American countries such as El Salvador and Honduras — among the poorest and most crime-ridden nations in the world — had some of the highest rates of positive experiences.